Official name: Oregon House Bill 4153
Establishes a 14-member Task Force on Artificial Intelligence in Oregon. Requires examination of AI-related terms for legislation, aligning with federal definitions. Directs submission of a report by December 1, 2024. Declares an emergency for immediate effect.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding state legislative act with mandatory language establishing a task force, with legal authority derived from the Oregon Legislative Assembly and declaring an emergency for immediate effect.
This document establishes a task force to examine AI terminology and definitions for future legislation. It does not directly address specific AI risks or harms. The document focuses on governance process and definitional work rather than substantive risk mitigation. No risk subdomains receive coverage scores above 1.
This document does not govern AI use in specific economic sectors. It establishes a task force to examine AI terminology and definitions for future legislation. The task force includes representatives from various sectors (business, education, government) as stakeholders providing input, but the document does not regulate AI activities within those sectors.
This document does not directly govern specific AI lifecycle stages. It establishes a task force to examine AI terminology and definitions for future legislation. The task force's work is preparatory and definitional rather than regulatory of actual AI development or deployment activities.
The document mentions artificial intelligence in general terms as the subject of the task force's examination but does not define or specifically address AI models, systems, or any technical categories. The task force is directed to examine and identify AI-related terms and definitions, but the document itself does not contain such definitions.
This is a House Bill from the Oregon state legislature, proposed through the standard legislative process. The document is enacted 'by the People of the State of Oregon' through their legislative representatives.
The Legislative Assembly receives the task force report and has authority over the task force through the appointing process and staff support. The Legislative Policy and Research Director provides oversight through staff support.
The task force must report to a specific legislative interim committee by December 1, 2024, and the Legislative Policy and Research Director provides staff support, implying monitoring and oversight functions.
The legislation establishes and applies to a specific task force with defined membership from various government branches and stakeholder groups. State agencies are explicitly directed to assist the task force.